EUGENE ROBINSON: Romney doesn't believe GOP spin about the polls

Conservative activist circles are abuzz with a new conspiracy theory: Polls showing President Barack Obama with a growing lead over Mitt Romney are deliberately being skewed by the "liberal mainstream media" so that Republicans will be disheartened and stay home on Election Day.

This is denial and self-delusion, but not of the harmless kind. It's a false narrative that encourages the Republican Party to take the wrong lessons from this election, no matter the outcome.

The whole atmosphere surrounding the presidential race is different since the party conventions. The Obama campaign has begun warning supporters about the perils of overconfidence. Romney, meanwhile, wages a daily battle to keep the words "beleaguered" and "embattled" from latching onto his candidacy.

The reason for the change is that polls indicate Obama's once-slim lead has grown beyond the margin of error. A Pew Research Center national poll last week showed Obama up by eight points. The most recent National Journal poll showed the president with a seven-point lead. On Wednesday, even the Gallup daily tracking poll - which has consistently measured the race as neck-and-neck - had Obama up by six.

The Rasmussen daily tracking poll, however, saw the race as still tied. Why the anomaly? Because the Rasmussen firm weights its sample to achieve what it believes to be a representative balance of Democrats and Republicans. While other pollsters also ask about party affiliation, most of them weight their samples to reflect the nation's demographic profile and do not seek a specific balance between R's and D's.

That's the discrepancy that gives rise to the conspiracy theories. The polls that show Obama with a substantial lead also show an electorate comprising substantially more Democrats than Republicans. It stands to reason, say the theorists, that these surveys would overestimate the vote for Obama and underestimate the vote for Romney; only if you adjust the results to more equally balance party affiliation can you get an accurate picture.

Those dastardly liberals in the media - and, apparently, in most of the major polling organizations - must have decided to give this false picture of the race in order to discourage conservatives and make them resigned to an Obama victory.

An anti-Obama website called unskewedpolls.com has reweighted a number of polls and concluded that Romney actually has a lead of nearly eight points.

So why is Romney acting like a man who's behind rather than comfortably ahead? Because he's smart enough to know the conspiracy theory is nuts.

The problem is that party affiliation can be weak and changeable. Voters who describe themselves as Democrats one month can call themselves Republicans or independents the next.

That's why the conspiracy theory is so dangerous for the GOP. If pollsters look at a demographically representative sample of registered or likely voters and find fewer Republicans than might be expected, it could be that voters who once might have called themselves Republicans no longer feel comfortable with the label.

There is ample polling data to suggest why this might be the case. Whoever wins in November, it is clear that while the past four years have been rough on the president's image, the impact on the Republican brand has been nothing less than brutal.

It's not the polls, it's the policies. Now that's a reason for Republicans to be depressed.

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EUGENE ROBINSON: Romney doesn't believe GOP spin about the polls

Conservative activist circles are abuzz with a new conspiracy theory: Polls showing President Barack Obama with a growing lead over Mitt Romney are deliberately being skewed by the 'liberal